Money Markets
By NEVILLE OTUKI, notuki@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The survey tracks the prices of food, housing, clothes, transport, household goods and entertainment in dollars for comparison across the world and uses New York as the base city.
- A weaker shilling also offers multinationals a golden window to negotiate lower dollar salaries for incoming expatriates, who peg their pay demands on the prevailing cost of living in the country of posting.
- The Kenyan shilling has shed 10.9 per cent to the greenback since March 2015 when a similar survey was done — meaning expats are getting more shillings for the same amount of dollars.
A weaker shilling and low inflation rate helped
Nairobi to improve its standing on the list of the world’s most
expensive cities for expatriates, the latest global cost of living
report says.
The report by New York-based consultancy Mecer shows
that the Kenyan capital improved 12 places from last year to stand at
position 116 as a weaker shilling increased the purchasing power of
expatriates who are mostly paid in dollars.
“The main reason that caused Nairobi’s drop in the
ranking is a weakening of the shilling against the US dollar (more than
10 per cent decrease) during the period in review,” Anna Panek of Mercer
said.
The improved ranking means Nairobi has become a
little cheaper for expatriates compared to other cities in the world.
Mecer surveyed the cost of living in 209 cities across the globe for
this year’s report.
Employees of multinational companies and those
working for non-governmental organisations and diplomatic agencies are
mostly paid in hard currency such as the US dollar which they convert to
local currency to buy what they need.
The Kenyan shilling has shed 10.9 per cent to the
greenback since March 2015 when a similar survey was done — meaning
expats are getting more shillings for the same amount of dollars.
The exchange rate-related pay rise points to a
growth in the purchasing power of the expatriates during the period when
inflation averaged six per cent.
“We observed some price increases for both goods
and services and rental accommodation costs in Nairobi, but it has not
offset the devaluation of the currency,” Ms Panek said.
The survey tracks the prices of food, housing,
clothes, transport, household goods and entertainment in dollars for
comparison across the world and uses New York as the base city.
This year’s survey was conducted in March and
serves as a guide for multinationals and diplomatic offices in
determining allowances of workers in overseas jobs.
Generally, expatriate life is expensive compared to
that of Kenyans with average rent in Nairobi’s posh estates, popular
with the foreign workers, standing at more than Sh155,000 a month. A
four-bedroom villa in Nairobi’s Ridgeways Estate, which has a clubhouse,
swimming pool and jogging track, for instance, costs Sh300,000 per
month.
The Kenyan capital is home to the United Nations
Environment Programme (Unep), multinational companies and diplomatic
missions whose employees are mostly paid in US dollars or euros.
The shilling ceded ground to the dollar in the
review period due to falling revenues from tourism — a key foreign
exchange earner — and a huge import bill that requires dollars to
transact.
READ: Rent, clothes prices make Nairobi most expensive city in EA
The Kenyan currency hit a low of Sh106 last September
compared to Sh91 in March last year. It is currently trading at Sh101 to
the greenback.
A weak shilling has the effect of inflating the
dollar, pound and euro-denominated pay of expats who ultimately find it
easier to buy goods and services in the local currency. Such exchange
rate swings means expatriates make big purchasing power gains in local
markets compared to those paid in the local currency.
An expat on a monthly salary of $5,000, for
instance, took home an equivalent of Sh455,000 in March last year when
the shilling was at Sh91. That amount would have risen to Sh505,000 this
year based on exchange rate fluctuations, or a 10.9 per cent pay
increase.
In Africa, Nairobi is ranked the 17th most
expensive city while Chad’s N’Djamena and Angola’s Luanda are the only
African cities in the top 10 list of most expensive cities globally at
position nine and two respectively.
Despite the improvement, however, Nairobi kept its
dubious distinction as East Africa’s most expensive city, followed by
Kigali (139), Dar es Salaam (174) and Kampala (187).
The improved ranking for the Kenyan capital should
in the near term ease pressure for wage increments on United Nations
agencies, diplomatic missions and multinationals companies with
operations in Nairobi.
Attract and retain foreign investment
It should also help improve the city’s ability to attract and retain foreign investment, expatriates and tourists.
A weaker shilling also offers multinationals a
golden window to negotiate lower dollar salaries for incoming
expatriates, who peg their pay demands on the prevailing cost of living
in the country of posting.
This is especially true for multinationals or
agencies that get their dollars from outside the country and who do not
have to suffer the pain of buying dollars at the local rates for
purposes of paying salaries.
Ordinarily, buying dollars at current levels for
purposes of paying salaries would increase the wage bill, thus raising
the employer’s costs.
Oil-rich Luanda, which had topped the list in
recent years, slipped to position two owing to the weakening of its
local currency. Hong Kong topped the table.
The world’s least expensive cities for expats is
the Namibian capital, Windhoek, followed by South Africa’s Cape Town and
Bishkek in Kyrgyzstan, the survey says.
A poll by Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) that
was released in March also said that the weakening of the shilling had
improved the cost of living for expats in Nairobi.
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